Describe the trip type
Mention whether the stay was a family vacation, couples getaway, solo trip, group trip, wedding, honeymoon, business stay, or all-inclusive escape.
ResortGrader reviews should help future travelers understand what a resort is really like: the service, rooms, amenities, dining, value, location, strengths, tradeoffs, and best-fit traveler.
ResortGrader reviews should help travelers compare resorts with practical context. A strong review explains what worked, what did not, who the resort is best for, and whether the experience felt worth the price.
The best reviews give future travelers enough detail to understand the experience. They do not need to be long, but they should be clear, honest, and connected to the actual stay.
Mention whether the stay was a family vacation, couples getaway, solo trip, group trip, wedding, honeymoon, business stay, or all-inclusive escape.
Useful reviews mention service, rooms, dining, amenities, cleanliness, beach or pool access, location, noise, fees, convenience, and overall value.
A balanced review is more useful than a one-sided complaint or praise. Explain what the resort did well and what future travelers should know before booking.
Reviews do not need to cover every category, but the more specific the review is, the more helpful it becomes for travelers comparing similar resorts.
ResortGrader may reject, remove, ignore, or edit review submissions that do not meet basic quality standards or that could make the site less useful for travelers.
Reviews should reflect real experiences. Do not submit fake reviews, copied reviews, competitor attacks, promotional content, or claims you cannot reasonably support.
Avoid threats, insults, private information, harassment, discriminatory language, or attacks on specific employees that do not help travelers understand the resort.
Reviews should focus on the resort stay. Airline problems, unrelated destination issues, or personal disputes may not be useful unless they directly affected the resort experience.
You do not need perfect writing. The goal is to give enough detail so another traveler can make a smarter decision.
“The resort was amazing. We loved it and would go back.”
“The resort worked well for our family trip. The pool area was easy with kids, staff were helpful, and the beach access was convenient. Dining was good overall, but dinner reservations were hard after 7 PM.”
Reviews may help ResortGrader identify patterns, improve resort profiles, support category rankings, and strengthen scorecards over time. Reviews should be handled carefully so one extreme comment does not unfairly define a resort.
ResortGrader may review submissions before displaying or using them. Spam, abusive content, fake reviews, duplicate reviews, or unsupported claims may be rejected.
A single review can be useful, but repeated review patterns are stronger signals. ResortGrader may look at consistency, freshness, detail, and review volume over time.
As the platform grows, traveler feedback may help inform resort profiles, category grades, ranking pages, traveler-fit summaries, and destination comparisons.
A quick review can still be valuable when it gives future travelers a clear picture of the stay.
These answers explain how reviews should be submitted, reviewed, and used by ResortGrader over time.
No. A short review can be helpful if it is specific. Mention the resort name, trip type, what worked, what did not, and whether the stay felt worth the price.
Yes. Negative reviews can be useful when they are fair, specific, and based on the actual stay. Unsupported accusations, threats, or personal attacks may not be accepted.
Over time, review patterns may help inform resort profiles, category grades, rankings, and traveler-fit summaries. ResortGrader should consider review quality, volume, freshness, and consistency.
Share what happened, what mattered, and who the resort is best for. Fair and specific reviews help ResortGrader build better resort profiles, rankings, and comparison tools.